If you browse the internet, many of the “ways to find happiness” surround the idea of focusing on yourself. Christ invites us to a different way of being, which is exactly the opposite. What did Jesus mean when he said “to find your life you must first lose it”? What if not focusing on our own happiness is actually the fastest way to find it?
A Way of Being • Gladstone
week 4
January 28, 2018 • Mark Sheets
A Way of Being • North Oak
January 28, 2018 • Mark Sheets
If you browse the internet, many of the “ways to find happiness” surround the idea of focusing on yourself. Christ invites us to a different way of being, which is exactly the opposite. What did Jesus mean when he said “to find your life you must first lose it”? What if not focusing on our own happiness is actually the fastest way to find it?
A Way of Being • Platte County
January 28, 2018 • Adam Mustoe
If you browse the internet, many of the “ways to find happiness” surround the idea of focusing on yourself. Christ invites us to a different way of being, which is exactly the opposite. What did Jesus mean when he said “to find your life you must first lose it”? What if not focusing on our own happiness is actually the fastest way to find it?
Beyond Circumstances • North Oak
January 21, 2018 • Mark Sheets
Two of the greatest obstacles to lasting happiness are regrets about the past and anxiety about the future, because they make it difficult to see what the present is offering us. How can we stay grateful in the midst of unwanted circumstances, or learn to let go of what we can’t control?